What Happens When Your Tweet Becomes a Subway Ad

Twitter’s latest branding campaign features tweets from its users. The authors did not get paid, but they did get swag.

Sarah Emerson
OneZero

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Photos: Sarah Emerson

OOne day in early September, San Franciscans stepped off the subway and straight into a sea of Twitter ads. “Twitter is garbage and I am a raccoon,” says a blown-up tweet that currently looms above a stairwell at the Powell Street station downtown. Dozens of other tweets — embiggened and printed onto posters — hang on walls, wrap around poles, and cover the tile floor.

The inescapable ads are part of “Twitter Is,” a new branding campaign that is “meant to further establish the platform as the one place where all people can express themselves in a truly authentic way and to erase any line that exists between what happens on Twitter and what happens in the real world,” according to Forbes. The campaign has transformed more than 100 tweets from regular people into ads and is running concurrently in San Francisco and New York.

Some Bay Area residents have grimly noted the disconnect between Twitter’s whimsical, feel-good ads and its persistent plague of platform abuse. At my subway stop, where police routinely eject homeless people who are looking for a warm place to sleep, one ad proclaims, “Twitter is not just an app…

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Sarah Emerson
OneZero

Staff writer at OneZero covering social platforms, internet communities, and the spread of misinformation online. Previously: VICE